Conglacio, conglacias, conglaciâre. Cic.To freese.Conglaciat eribunatus Curioni. Cælius ad Ciceronem. Cuio letteth his office of Tribimeship fceese: or he doth in it nothing worthie memorieConglaciatus. a. um, pen prod. Participium Plin. Frosen.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
con-glăcĭo, no perf., ātum, 1, v. n. and a. (very rare). I.Neutr., to turn entirely to ice, to freeze up. A. Prop.: aqua neque conglaciaret frigoribus, neque nive pruinaque concresceret, Cic. N. D. 2, 10, 26.—B.Trop.: Curioni nostro tribunatus conglaciat, is frozen up, i. e. passes inactively, Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 6, 3; cf. congelo fin. —II.Act., to cause to freeze up: conglaciantur aquae, Albin. 2, 101: conglaciato imbre, Plin. 2, 60, 61, 152.